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Inclusive Education in Contexts of Social and Cultural Diversity - Regional Seminar

Inclusive Education in Contexts of Social and Cultural Diversity - Regional Seminar Pula and Brijuni, Croatia 17 to 19 September 2009. Equal opportunity based supporting policy in public education- The H ungarian experience in using EU structural funds.

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Inclusive Education in Contexts of Social and Cultural Diversity - Regional Seminar

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  1. Inclusive Education in Contexts of Social and Cultural Diversity - Regional Seminar Pula and Brijuni, Croatia 17 to 19 September 2009 Equal opportunity based supporting policy in public education-The Hungarian experience in using EU structural funds

  2. Legal and financial backgroundof the HungarianEducational School Integration Program Anti-discrimination provisions • Public Education Act • Equal Treatment Act Changing the ministerial decree (11/1994.MKM) in order to create the legal and financial background (39/E: per capita allowance for integrated education) This regulation introduces the concept of preparatory training for the realization of potential and integration. New forms of assistance are aimed at making it possible for children with different social and cultural backgrounds to be taught together and receive the same level of education. The new integration programs has been introduced in the 2003/2004 school year. Who is eligible to participate in the integration program? The pupils (mainly Romani pupils) who can benefit fromthis programare those students • whose parents attended only elementary school and find it difficult to understand the modern requirements of schools; • whose family is eligible for supplementary family allowance, i.e., they come from an economically disadvantaged environment;

  3. Financialmechanismsof the Educational School Integration Program From 2003: per capita allowance for integrated education From 2007: competitive grant funding to support ability-development, integrated trainings and pre-school development programmes New financial mechanisms to replace “integration head quotas” and to promote equal opportunity and the closing-up of the gap between disadvantaged and mainstream children. • major transformation of the mechanisms and the system of financing equal opportunity-equity practices as supporting legislation provided mechanisms to apply benchmarks in the provision of funding • in the evaluation of applications performance in competence-development is also taken into account: schools have to attach their results in a table of indicators of National Competence Assessment with a view to the ratio of children with compound disadvantages in the school

  4. What are the methods teachers can use in order to implement these integration programs? • The Ministry of Education and Culture is providing guidance through the services of the National Educational Integration Network. • Integration methods that have proved to be successful in Hungary and abroad, such as the Step-by-Step Programor other alternative methods tailored to personal needs. The National Educational Integration Network • network from 2003, with its headquarters in Budapest and regional coordinators in the regions of the country, • responsible for providing coordination and a wide range of professional assistance in education for those schools implementing integration programs.

  5. The Impact of the Educational School Integration Program on Classroom Work, Skills and Inter-Ethnic Attitudes, 2008 The analysis is based on a matched sample of 30 participating schools and 30 control schools that are very similar to the program schools. Features: • student-centered education, • higher levels of student autonomy, • wide-spread use of cooperative group work The study finds that the students of the program schools achieve somewhat higher grades, their reading skills are also somewhat better, and they are more likely to pursue further education in secondary schools that provide a maturity examination than their peers in control schools. The effects on cognitive and academic development are largest for the Roma students, it is positive, if often modest, for all student groups.

  6. The Impact of the Educational School Integration Program on Classroom Work, Skills and Inter-Ethnic Attitudes, 2008 • It is possible to achieve integrated education in which both the Roma and the non-Roma students develop better skills and attitudes. • It is not an easy task for the schools. • It may necessitate significant changes in the organization of education, it may require new teaching methods and a new approach from the schoolteachers, and it surely involves extra work by all teachers and managers. • Those teachers as well as managers need appropriate training, support, and incentives.

  7. The Impact of the Educational School Integration Program on Classroom Work, Skills and Inter-Ethnic Attitudes, 2008 • Some of the effects are larger for Roma, others for non-Roma students, but again, they are positive for all student group analyzed. • Ethnic prejudice against the Roma is also positively affected by the program. • Non-Roma students of program schools see the Roma in a less stereotyped way, they keep a smaller social distance from them, and they think less in terms of social hierarchy. • Finally, students of program schools are characterized by lower levels of social dominance orientation.

  8. Further modifications 2007, 2008, 2009 • Financial support to those disadvantaged families that send their children to kindergarten before the child’s 4th birthday • Schools must participate in the annual National Competence Assessment that provide external evaluation of schools’ teaching performance • The local government of low performing schools must prepare and action plan for school development • Public Education Act § 66. modifies the practice of the free choice of schools by making it mandatory for schools to take children whose residence is within the school district. • Complementary stipend for teachers working with children with compound disadvantages. (more than 13.000 teachers, 600 elementary schools, 450 kindergartens) • Public Education Equal Opportunity Action Plan as an OBLIGATION - condition of support from both EU and national sources (Public Education Act amendment 2007, 2008)

  9. Program types of Hungarian National Development Plan II. relevant to Roma education (2007-2013) • Regional Development Programs (ROP) – ERDF Basic infrastructure development of school(each type) and kindergartens(construction/renovation of buildings, purchasing of new equipments related to innovative pedagogy) • Social Infrastructure Operational Program (TIOP) – ESF, ERDF Information technology development in schools (each type) to support access to broadband internet service and high-standard IT tools

  10. Program types of Hungarian National Development Plan II. relevant to Roma education (2007-2013) • Social Innovation Operational Program (TÁMOP) • Measuresto enhance employability and to develop employment services (TÁMOP priorities: 1,2) • Measures to develop higher education services and research and development technology (TÁMOP priority:4) • Measuresto develop social services and to enhance social inclusion (TÁMOP priority:5) • Measureson public education development(TÁMOP priority:3) • Overall programs to develop public education (e.g. development of assessment tools, development of competence-based curricula and pedagogical measures) • Targeted programs to promote equal opportunity of multiple disadvantaged and especially Roma children (TÁMOP 3.3 constructions)

  11. Equal Opportunity-based supporting policy in public education GOALS: • To prevent support for the maintenance of segregated schooling and for educational projects increasing inequalities • To promote equity in education and access to quality education for multiple disadvantaged (Roma) children in all levels of public education from age 3 to 18 • To enforce an equal opportunity approach into every public education development project • To support the implementation of equal opportunity development measures, which are adjusted to local situations, problems and needs

  12. Equal Opportunity-based supporting policy in public education TOOLS: • Public Education Equal Opportunity Situation-analysis and Plan must be elaborated by every school maintainer organisation (municipality, micro-regional association of municipalities, church, NGO), which intend to receive support for education development • condition of support from both EU and national sources (Public Education Act 105. § 2007 and 2008) • based on the situation-analysis and plan the proposed development project is evaluated by its potential impact on equity in education • in case the project is accepted, the implementation of the Public Education Equal Opportunity Plan will be a contractual obligation of the beneficiary • Providing free consultancy on the elaboration of situation analysis and Equal Opportunity Plans through a network of trained equal opportunity experts • Providing financial and professional support for the implementation of Equal Opportunity Plans (through an ESF funded equal opportunity development measure of the Social Innovation Operational Program (TAMOP 3.3.2 – total budget: 27,277,399 EUR) • Implementation of the aspects of equal opportunity in all tenders, aiming the development of education.

  13. Equal Opportunity-based supporting policy in public education ACHIEVEMENTS: • Network of 70 trained public education equal opportunity expert was established in 2007 • More than 1400 school maintainer made their educational equal opportunity situation analysis • 600 school maintainer municipality and micro-regional associationreceived expert assistance for the situation analysis • The situation analysis have been used in the evaluation process of educational infrastructure and information technology development projects in 2008 –total budget: 320,000,000 EUR /253 project receive support for education infrastructure development in the framework of this program in 2008 and have the obligation to start the implementation of their equal opportunity plan/ • Call for proposal of TAMOP 3.3.2 measure is published on April 30, 2008 to provide support for the implementation of equal opportunity programs of school maintainers - total budget: 27,277,399 EUR

  14. Horizontal approach • Goal: Promoting equal opportunity for Roma children in every education development program • Tool: Equal Opportunity-based supporting policy • Goal: Promoting access to EU development funds for the most disadvantaged regions • Tool: Micro-regional focus

  15. Regional Focus • Giving priority to projects implemented in the most disadvantaged micro-regions and settlements (‘affirmative action’) • Training professionals in the micro-regions • Map of resources, workshops

  16. Main tools to influence planning in order to attract EU funds for Roma education Social dialogue • Planning of operational programs • Planning of action plans • Call for proposals Participation • Monitoring Committees of the operational programs (supervision) • Preparatory working groups of tenders (elaboration of tender documentations)

  17. Thank you for your attention! Szilvia Pallaghy Hegyi Email: szilvia.pallaghy@okm.gov.hu Phone: +36-1-473-7085

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